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Once Upon a Time in Norte America: The Rise of Carlos Slim

by Bill Friday (writer), March 14, 2007

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"You don't tug on Superman's cape, you don't spit into the wind, you don't pull the mask of that old Lone Ranger and you don't mess around with Slim." - Jim Croce.

1902. A young man flees persecution in his home country and travels half way around the world to find a new home and a new way of life. How many times have we heard that one? But what if the young man was born in Lebanon? And what if the country he emigrated to wasn't the U.S., but Mexico?

Here begins the story of Carlos Slim.

Carlos Slim is the son of Julian Slim (Yusef Salim) Haddad, a Lebanese Christian (non-Muslim) who left his own country for a better (read: longer) life at the southern end of North America. Through hard work and shrewd investments - yes, Mexican investments - buying land in downtown Mexico City following the revolution of 1910, the elder Slim became a successful businessman.

And the son picked up right where his late father left off.

By the age of 26, Carlos Slim had an accumulated wealth of $400,000. He had married the future mother of his six children. Armed only with a degree in civil engineering and a big pile of money (Mexico in 1936 money), he began buying things. Lots of things. Businesses.

Skip ahead forty years.

Carlos Slim is rich.

Sorry, I may have understated that a bit. Carlos Slim is RICH!. Ridiculously, excessively, non-stop, stinking, light your cigars with million dollar bills RICH! So rich, that his cumulative wealth is estimated somewhere between thirty billion (Forbes) to FIFTY BILLION DOLLARS (Reuters; Fortune). So rich, that in 2006, he saw his wealth increase $2.2 million per hour (Belfast Telegraph).

Although the majority of his money has come from the telecommunications industry, Slim's holdings also include five insurance companies (valued at $1.5 billion), a Mexican retail chain (pretax annual profit, $500 million), a mining company, an auto parts manufacturing company, a bank, a tobacco company, oh, and another mining company. All told, Slim's companies account for almost one-half of the value of the Mexican stock exchange.

And before you think Carlos Slim's empire stops at the Mexican border, south-of-which 4 out of every 5 cell lines and 9 out of every 10 land lines are owned and operated by him, think again. Have you ever bought anything at Comp USA? The computer you're reading this article on, maybe? You just added to the man's not-so-slim portfolio. Designer purses? How about Saks Fifth Avenue where the slim pickins aren't so slim? Cha-ching! He owns them both. In the time it took you to read this paragraph, Carlos Slim just made $18,000.

Now before you jump from your Comp USA computer chair and shout, "Bastardo Codicioso!" (that's "Greedy Bastard!" en Español), hear what else this man, who one day soon will be the richest in the world, has done.

In 2006, from endowments to and through his foundations, Carlos Slim donated $1.8 billion to charitable cause including giving away 95,000 bicycles to children of poor families to ride to their schools, 70,000 pairs of eyeglasses, and scholarships to 150,000 university students.

Similar donations over the last ten years start to read like a box score. They include 66 million bikes and 10 million pairs of contact lenses.

He even donated thousands of laptop computers to students, thus providing them access to the Internet. As early as next week, Carlos Slim plans to announce a new plan to donate upwards of 10 billion more dollars over the next four years to help fund Mexican health and education programs.

Add to it the fact that Slim's companies also employ 250,000 Mexicans.

So how come a large segment of his own people don't trust him?

Remember the laptops? When the students accessed the Internet, whose ISP did they use?

Do you own a PC or a Mac? If you own a Mac, do you trust Bill Gates? The very fact that you can own a Mac allows you to rest a little easier even while knowing that Bill Gates is the richest man in the world. Do you like Coke? No? Well then, at least there's Pepsi.

If you're a Mexican citizen, Carlos Slim is Microsoft, Apple, Coke, Pepsi and GM all rolled into one. In spite of all of Slim's charitable contributions, Mexico's working class just doesn't trust him.

In the last year, this distrust took the form of satire. A cartoon of Slim, depicted as a boxer lying flat on his back in the ring as he crushes a tiny opponent appeared in the Mexican newspaper La Reforma. In the drawing, telephone lines make up the ropes around the ring. Beneath the cartoon a caption reads, "Billion Dollar Baby".

Around the same time, in a segment on the Mexican TV show, "La Verdad Sea Dicha" ("The Truth Be Told"), a mocking news anchor shoves a pie into the mouth of a papier maché effigy of Slim.

But this attitude is also found in the academic community, where many find the practice of making giant public donations a questionable cover for something else.

One professor, Denise Dresser of the Autonomous Technological Institute of Mexico, points out, "In Mexico, the perception is that public deeds are done for personal gain." In another interview Dresser adds that "a growing public consensus that Slim's attempts to block competition are hurting the Mexican economy." She goes on to say, "He wants to ward off those criticisms."

Dresser is not alone.

George Grayson is an expert on the subject of Latin American politics. For the last 38 years he's been a faculty member of The College of William and Mary. When interviewed by the L.A. Times on the subject of Mexico's lack of economic competition, Grayson said, "It is still full of public and private monopolies and bottlenecks."

In a country where the power of wealth is controlled by a relatively few tight-nit grupos, all of which together are known as "The 100 Families", the largest monopoly by far is controlled by Carlos Slim.

Once more from Dresser. "Mexico has a dense, intricate web of connections between the government and the business class. This ends up creating a government that doesn't defend the public interest... It is rather willing to help its friends, its allies and, in some cases, its business partners thrive at the expense of the Mexican people."

So, what of the monopoly created by Carlos Slim? If Slim has done this much for his own people, whether some trust him or not, shouldn't we rise from our Comp USA computer chairs and applaud?

Economists say that Mexico actually loses money due to the monopolies controlled by Slim and The 100 Families, causing Mexico's per capita income to fall to less than $7,000, leaving the country in poverty.

Ask the 10 percent of the Mexican population that currently lives in the United States why they left home.

And why, by working for the decidedly low wages generally available to "illegals" in this country, remittances sent back to Mexico by these workers totaled a record $20 billion in 2005.

So what will it take to, once and for all, bring Mexico to a place where its own citizens will want to return? Slim himself defines his own role in the process.

"My new job," says Carlos Slim, "is to focus on the development and employment of Latin America."

If he means employ at a working wage commensurate with the rest of Norte America, he doesn't say.

So what more will it take for Slim and, for that matter, the rest of the wealthiest of Mexico's power brokers to satisfy the skepticism of the Mexican working class that distrusts him so much?

Denise Dresser calls it a wish list. One that, "every Mexican committed to his country would ask from Santa Claus." And that is?

"The day that you (Slim) give 80 percent of your personal fortune to an unselfish cause is the day that I will become your champion."

Oh. Is that all.

Early next week, Carlos Slim plans to unveil another expansion of his vast charitable, educational and business infrastructural plan to the world.

Will it satisfy his biggest critics?

I guess we'll see it in the funny pages.


About the Writer

Bill Friday is a writer for BrooWaha. For more information, visit the writer's website.
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19 comments on Once Upon a Time in Norte America: The Rise of Carlos Slim

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By Matt Weston on March 14, 2007 at 06:48 pm
Outstanding. Embarrassing note: I'd never heard of Carlos Slim before. Any relation to Iceberg Slim? :) And any word on how charitable the other "100 Families" have been? If they're all degenerate profiteers -- or thought of as degenerate profiteers -- Mr. Slim may have give away alot more bikes before his reputation improves.
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By Steven Lane on March 14, 2007 at 10:35 pm
Great article Bill. You out scooped me, I was going to do a piece on the list released on the top 10 richest people in the world. Until last week, I had never heard of this guy either. My research says he will be the numero uno, top dog, soon! Moving Bill Gates down the ladder. He literally OWNS Mexico communications. Mexicans don't trust anyone with money, it is usally ill gotten. 5 out of 5 from me.
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By Reza B on March 15, 2007 at 06:47 pm
I know you mentioned his wealth as a reason for the distrust, but is the main reason he's distrusted because he's rich, or has he done something else (like bury toxic waste under a pre-school) to earn a reputation as being untrustworthy? I enjoyed reading your article. . . well researched. Thanks.
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By S Beristain on May 11, 2007 at 12:54 am
Once upon a time in Mexico City there were (are) two publications, one is called La Jornada, and the other Proceso. Both are the most pesimistic publications in the country. If you are not friend of Comandante Marcos, and if you didn't study at the National University of Mexico, then you are not their friend. Basically, no matter what politicians do for the country, if they don't belong to the PRD party, whatever they did is wrong. She always manages to find the worst in anything. For this two publications, the end of the world is near. And Ms. Dresser happens to work for both, the Jornada newspaper and Proceso. So for her, everything is bad, everything is corrupt, everything leads us to the end of the world, everything is catastrophic, and she likes being interviewed in foreign publications, like Forbes, where you did copy her quotations from.
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By Bill Friday on July 04, 2007 at 12:03 am
ADDENDUM: As of 18 hours ago, Carlos Slim was officially named "The World's Richest Man". In the words of Geri Smith, writing in Business Week, "Another month, another 3.5 billion dollars." Slim is now reportedly worth $67.5 BILLION, thoroughly eclipsing Bill Gates. I was tipped of to this, not from any one news story, but by the insane number of link hits and page views I received since this morning (over one thousand in the last 12 hours) on a story that is almost $20 billion out of date in just over three months. I'm glad BrooWaha is receiving recognition from this, without even lifting a Slim finger. Thanks, Ariel. Bill
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By M Fiaschi on July 04, 2007 at 03:28 pm
I live in Mexico City. Yes i see every day poverty and non educated people but also I can say there is so much potential in this country. People are kind and hard working but also underpaid. Slim is an example of success so there is no excuses if somebody throw a stone at him is only jeaolusy. And they can´t hack it. Dresser is nothing but a Leftist and overpaid Want to be journalist. Nothing more. Mario Fiaschi
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By manny osborne on July 04, 2007 at 06:23 pm
" Well Mexicans don't trust poeple with money that's a fact, he is going to be call corrupt and all kind of names but to build a monopoly the big, you really need to work hard, common give a guy a little credit if he wants to donate bicycles is his money, so Do you like bill gates?. Manny
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By Steven Blake on July 11, 2007 at 12:41 pm
I had no clue who he was till I read this article. Thanks!
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By M Fiaschi on July 11, 2007 at 02:25 pm
I like bill Gates to and Buffet too. In a land of opportunity you got to take the chances that you get on the way. Sometimes people are going to get upset because somebody is getting richer. And not them. I like hardworking and innovators and people with vision. Like Murdoch. and Slim. people should get to work and try to make everyday the best that they can. And It is not only Mexicans who don´t trust people with money I been all around and people in Africa Asia Europe and in the US don´t trust people with money. Let´s face it it is not easy to make money and sometimes you have to be a little ruthless. Thanks.
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By slpalm on July 11, 2007 at 05:09 pm
I agree. And I can't believe someone would say that "mexicans don't trust people with money" are you @#$%^&* kidding me? what makes a Mexican different than the rest? Generally speaking most people don't trust people with money and, even with that I have issues, but that's a whole different story. I agree with the fact that in order to make money you have to be savvy, you have to be a little agressive it's not just going to show up in your front door you have to go get it and do things other people are not willing to. So, anyone who doesn't trust rich people is closed minded and ignorant as well as anyone who thinks that mexicans don't trust rich people.
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By M Fiaschi on July 23, 2007 at 01:50 pm
That is a great observation Anyone who doesn´t trust people with money is either closed minded and ingnorant and also with a big chunk of jealousy. Let´s get to work and innovate. Money can come. Trust has no nationality it is a human condition. Thanks.
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By ShiShiJoon on August 08, 2007 at 05:03 pm
Not sure if you read this but thought you'd enjoy: http://edition.cnn.com/2007/BUSINESS/08/07/slim.fortune.reut/index.html I think he has helped many but also think he's too big of a fish for the pond now. I wish he'd give smaller businesses the opportunity to grow.
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By Dany Bachir on August 10, 2007 at 02:22 am
I'm Lebanese and I know how we can excel in business. We think "business" in everything we do. I hope Carlos Slim will look back at his roots and consider helping Lebanon in some way. I'm talking for 4m Lebanese currently in Lebanon and probably another 10m around the world.
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By V on November 26, 2007 at 06:27 pm
I missed this one (one of many in recent months). Great article! Well written, interestingly written and well reasearched. Thanks Bill!
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By El Vigilante on September 16, 2008 at 11:58 pm

Not so fast, gentlemen. Catchy phrase in the piece: "Skip ahead forty years". Lets not. Carlos Slim is certainly a brilliant tycoon who knows how to expand an empire in Napoleonic fashion. But the fact is also tat the huge expansion of his wealth came about during the presidency of Carlos Salinas. Essentially, he handed the national telephone network (taxpayed by people over many many years) for peanuts to his compadre. At the time, the catch "Carlos & Charlies Co." was delivered as a mock to the suspicious partnering of the deal. That is what people in Mexico distrust, and that is why Slim (by the way, I met him in person) generates so many divided opinions: he is savvy and hardworking, no doubt. But he had little influence on the market before the juicy government deal, as pointed out by Dresser, came through.

A few more notes: Dresser comes from UNAM school, but so does Slim. She also works at ITAM (Mexicos political class college).  The phrase about the bottlenecks for resources and decisions in Mexico is right on the money. It slows everything down and people settle for low wage. The history of the few families is similar to Slims. Government bails, they work for it and the rest of th epopulation is excluded. If you want to know how does that feel, I am writing this note in 2008 after the US govmt has announced that hundreds of billions of money will be used to rescue Freddie Mac, Fannie Mac, AIX and Wall Street guys. Now, move some 10 years into the future and imagine you read about "the wealthiest guys in the world" being ex-Enrons, ex-Fredie Macs and ex-Wall Streets,  who now claim they are helping the economy, and saying they want to help "poor people" who  "dont have much opportunities" and are not "as lucky". Hard-workers and savvy ? sure. Does it tell the whole story? Being a mexican who knows some about economic history, I assure you not. 

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By droidster on October 12, 2009 at 02:01 pm

Carlos Slim's rise speaks volumes about the kind of reforms that need to happen in Latin America.  In order for Latin America to give its citizens the lives they deserve, it has to open up its markets.  Slim's empire is composed of generally closed markets and monopolies.  While a few prosper, the majority suffer from declining purchasing power.  This is wrong.  The solution, however, is not socialism but greater competition and more level economic playing fields.  Everyone wins--the consumer gets more jobs and lower prices, the government gets more tax revenue, and yes--the business class benefits too.  The business class benefits from increased demand and lower costs due to innovation/economies of scale forced by competitive pressure. 

Don't believe this works?  Look at Hong Kong and Singapore.  Look at other countries that opened their markets. 

D Roidster
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<a href="http://www.houstonproperties.com/houston-townhomes.html">Houston Townhomes for sale</a>

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By Lady D on November 10, 2009 at 08:37 am

Excellant article. And since I am just getting around to it now in 2009 it takes on a whole new relevancy.

I remember in high school economics my teacher said, " In order to bring the third world up, you have to bring the first world down. This will happen in your lifetime."

Yes, we have many Slims and we can prove they were corrupt and yet nothing happens. Not just the Mexicans that are sceptical anymore.

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By manny osborne on November 28, 2009 at 11:08 am

@slpalm here what make Mexicans diferent about the rest is called "La cultura de la telenovela" the soap opera culture, in Mexico you grow up watching telenovelas and there is not a Mexican telenovela where the rich people are not the villians. but when you know how Slim had his hands in Telmex, thanks to is compadre Carlos Salinas (Mexican expresidente)

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By john robet on December 05, 2009 at 07:26 am

Carlos Slim used his holding company Grupo Carso to become involved in a wide variety of economic activities, ranging from telecommunications to retail sales. With a personal fortune that reached $11 billion in 2002, Slim was the richest person in Latin America and one of the wealthiest people in the world. He established a reputation for buying failing companies at low prices and then restoring them to profitability. By the late 1990s Slim had begun to slowly hand the reins of his business empire over to his sons. testking 640-802 exam 350-001 exam VCP-310 exam

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